this post was submitted on 04 May 2024
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[–] Agrivar 11 points 6 months ago (2 children)

What is 'NDd' short for? I'm drawing a blank, and searching for anything on the internet is pointless these days...

[–] chiliedogg 16 points 6 months ago (1 children)

"Negligent Discharge."

It's used in the firearms community instead of anything with the word "accident" because there's almost never a reason for a gun to fire unintentionally that doesn't involve a serious fuckup by the user.

Any ND that results in death or injury should also be treated as a felony. There are 4 basic rules to firearm safety that should be followed at all times. Any one of them should prevent injury, so you have to fuck up all 4 at once to hurt someone.

  1. Treat every gun as if it were loaded at all times.
  2. Keep your finger away from the trigger until ready to fire.
  3. Do not let the gun point at anything you're not willing to kill or destroy
  4. Know your target and what's beyond your target.

The only true accidents I know of regarding a gun being fired unintentionally involve faulty weapons firing on their own (more likely to win the lottery), but even then they shouldn't hurt anyone because it should be pointed in a safe direction.

[–] Agrivar 2 points 6 months ago

Thank you for your reply!

[–] AFaithfulNihilist 7 points 6 months ago (1 children)

I think it's short for negligently discharged but it's kind of stupid to shorten that. I can't imagine what reason there is to not just write " negligently discharged".

Frankly I think calling it a "negligent discharge" is giving the officer too much credit. The gun shouldn't even have been unholstered. Guns are used to shoot not threaten. If he was pulling the gun out then he intended to fire it and if he pulled the gun out without intending to fire it then it wasn't a negligent discharge it was an incompetent booger hooking by a pants shitting coward.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 6 months ago

Negligent discharge is the term you use whenever someone shoots their gun when they didn't intend to. It's just common lingo to shorten it to ND or ND'd. It's one of those terms that, at face value, doesn't convey the seriousness of what you just did, but people who use the term regularly know just how bad it is.